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By Dave Rodman, Turner Sports Interactive
November 16, 2002
3:32 PM EST (2032 GMT)
HOMESTEAD, Fla. -- Tony Stewart, the NASCAR Winston Cup championship leader, collided with a freelance photographer Saturday afternoon as he left his garage stall after the final practice session of the day.
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| A day from going for his first Winston Cup championship, Tony Stewart is under investigation again. Credit: Autostock |
Getty Images photographer Rusty Jarrett, who said he covers about a dozen races a year, said the contact surprised him. He said he was well away from Stewart's garage, standing still shooting Stewart from a distance with a long-range lens.
"I just want to know why he did it," Jarrett said. "He can't do that for no reason."
Stewart had a news conference to attend sponsored by series sponsor R.J. Reynolds and had to debrief with crew chief Greg Zipadelli first. Witnesses said Stewart had cut through an adjacent garage stall, seemingly trying to avoid a knot of media and bystanders outside his garage, and cut around a corner trying to head for his hauler before he struck Jarrett.
Jarrett said Stewart was running and either lowered his shoulder or used a forearm to knock him backwards about five feet.
A photographer for The Miami Herald captured an image of the contact and media members and NASCAR officials reviewed it just after 1:30 p.m. ET.
Sports Illustrated photographer George Tiedemann said he witnessed the incident and said it had no merit, adding that if Stewart had not been involved in any previous altercations it would not be an issue.
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Stewart was placed on probation by both NASCAR and sponsor Home Depot earlier this season for shoving a photographer at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and was accused by a fan of shoving her after the night race at Bristol Motor Speedway in August.
That allegation was later dropped.
Last season, Stewart was fined and placed on probation for an altercation in which he slapped a tape recorder out of a reporter's hands and kicked it under a trailer.
Tiedemann, who said Jarrett was a "competent and honest photographer," said if the contact was intentional that Stewart -- who Tiedemann said was knocked off balance by the impact and uttered an expression of surprise -- would not have looked back to either make sure Jarrett was OK or to even confirm what had happened.
"I could see what Tony was trying to do and I was trying to shoot images of photographers photographing him, so I was right behind Rusty," Tiedemann said. "Maybe he (Stewart) was annoyed, but if you were trying to go somewhere and you unexpectedly ran into someone, you might be, too."
"We need to find out who saw it," NASCAR vice president for corporate communications Jim Hunter said. "I have talked to a couple people who saw it and it appears to me that it was an unintentional thing -- that Tony was trying to run back to his hauler and that's all I know right now."
Hunter left the track's infield media center to try to meet with Stewart.
Jarrett said he was not interested in making a legal case of the issue, but added that rumors that Stewart made contact with him in jest were unfounded.
"I don't know him at all," Jarrett said. "If it were Ward Burton, who I know, and have been up with, it would have been a joke, but I don't know him (Stewart). He wasn't laughing."
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